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Visiting NYC with Low Vision and Hearing Impairment: A Personal Essay

Zaakirah Muhammad 02/02/2026

A woman with a green headwrap stands outdoors in a city park on a sunny day, with pigeons flying overhead and people in the background among autumn-colored trees and urban buildings.

Zaakirah Muhammad in Washington Square Park. Photo: Gabby Jones

My name is Zaakirah Nayyar Muhammad. My first name is Arabic for “the afterlife,” and my middle name means “bright light.” I am a retinoblastoma survivor, having lost vision in my right eye and wearing a prosthetic there since I was nine months old. As an adult, I live with glaucoma and cataracts in my left eye. The radiation treatment that saved my life also took most of my hearing, requiring me to use a hearing aid, primarily in my right ear.

My mother, a native New Yorker, moved to Atlanta, where she met my dad. But it was back in NYC, at Memorial Sloan Kettering, where she sought the second opinion that confirmed my cancer diagnosis. I’ve visited the City several times, always surrounded by family and friends. My most recent trip was different: my first post-pandemic solo journey to the City that holds so much of our family’s history.

I intentionally planned this trip to revisit places I’d shared with my late maternal aunt, to follow in my mother’s teenage footsteps and to explore new destinations, all through the lens of a disability advocate.

A person wearing a black jacket and backpack waits on a subway platform, holding a phone, as a train arrives. Green pillars and signs for elevators and various subway lines are visible.

West Fourth Street Subway Station. Photo: Gabby Jones

A person holds up a smartphone to take a photo of an electronic subway map displaying train routes and station names inside a subway car. The reflection of the map is visible on the phone screen.

Subway map on the C train. Photo: Gabby Jones


Between the MTA app, Google Maps and the large, easy-to-read signs, I could easily navigate independently throughout New York City. The new buses are equipped with LED signs that clearly list upcoming stops. For someone with hearing loss, this feature is a game changer. It saved me the energy-draining task of asking for directions and repeatedly requesting clarification, as well as the anxiety of constantly looking around to avoid missing my stop.

While Google Maps was a vital tool in navigating, its walking directions weren’t always clear. Initially, it didn’t specify that I could transfer between subway lines without having to leave a station (such as Port Authority or Moynihan Train Hall). I got a lot of extra exercise and some unexpected sightseeing before I figured that out!

Exterior entrance of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, part of the New York Public Library, with glass doors, a welcome sign, and red posters reading "OUR STORY," "OUR HISTORY," and "OUR FUTURE" on the windows.

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Photo: Zaakirah Muhammad


Day 1

My first destination was the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem to see their centennial exhibit. On my train, I was impressed by the modern map that lit up to show current and upcoming stops, an LED marquee announcing the next station and green-colored lights to inform you of which side to exit.

A person wearing a black coat and headwrap sits on a subway train bench, looking to the side. Behind them is a subway map and a sign showing the 72nd Street station.

Photo: Gabby Jones

When the train wasn’t too loud, I could even hear automated announcements about which stations had elevators. Not all stations are equipped with elevators, and when they are, sometimes they’re located at the opposite end of the platform from where you want to exit.

Photo of a museum wall display. It shows a historical newspaper clipping about the NY Public Library’s Negro literature exhibit above two brown panels highlighting milestones from 1950, 1951, 1962, and 1964 for the Schomburg Collection.

100: A Century of Collections, Community and Creativity, Schomburg Center. Photo: Zaakirah Muhammad

At the Schomburg Center, I was fascinated to discover that Langston Hughes’ ashes are interred in a book-style urn beneath the basement-level floor. I appreciated how easily accessible it was to walk through the exhibits. I also appreciated the large-print booklets of the exhibits that also had image descriptions.

A group of people sitting in chairs.

Mind's Eye experience, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Photo: Gabby Jones

I walked a few blocks to take the M1 bus to the Guggenheim Museum for their monthly Mind’s Eye experience. There, I joined an audio tour of Rashid Johnson’s work, which was very interactive. The exhibit (which closed in January) spanned all five floors of the museum’s iconic spiral ramp. The guides provided foldable chairs for us to use on each level, allowing us to rest and engage with the art comfortably. I made sure to sit close enough to lip-read the guide. I also appreciated that many museums now use QR codes that link to transcripts or descriptions of the artwork. I hope more institutions commit to transcribing all their audio content.

A young woman wearing a lavender headscarf and headphones sits among others in a gallery. In a second frame, a person helps her with an audio device as she remains seated, looking attentive.

Photo: Gabby Jones

A person in a lavender headscarf, white shirt, and green pants walks past black metal shelves filled with various potted plants and mirrors, creating a modern, lush indoor display.

Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers, Guggenheim Museum. Photo: Gabby Jones

Day 2

My NYC adventure continued the next day as I journeyed to a reflective afternoon at Washington Square Park. I found a familiar bench, a spot where my aunt and I once enjoyed a takeaway lunch. I remembered how often the pigeons would walk by during my casual conversations with my aunt while we were watching people at the dog park.

A person wearing a dark headwrap and green shirt sits on a bench in a sunlit park, smiling and resting their head on one hand, with trees, benches, and people in the background.

Washington Square Park. Photo: Gabby Jones

I then took the train to East Harlem’s 110th Street, also called Central Park North and home to the Frederick Douglass Memorial. This landmark holds deep significance for me as a descendant of Douglass’s half-brother, Stephen Bailey. Seeing the mural of Frederick Douglass at Amy Ruth’s restaurant also felt like a powerful connection to my heritage. I ate with photographer and professor Laylah Amatullah Barrayn. We savored delicious soul food and enjoyed the perfectly volumed ambient R&B music.

A person holds a smartphone and looks at its screen while standing on a sidewalk. In the background, a cyclist rides past on the street.

Photo: Gabby Jones

Two women sit at a restaurant table, laughing and looking at a phone. There are plates of food and drinks in front of them. A mural of a suited figure with a red, white, and blue background is on the wall behind them.

Zaakirah Muhammad (left) and Laylah Amatullah Barrayn at Amy Ruth's. Photo: Gabby Jones

Laylah then invited me to a captivating book signing at the NYU Global Center for Academic and Spiritual Life. There, I used a captioning app on my Samsung phone to listen to the guest speakers.

The evening shifted to Dizzy’s Jazz Club at Lincoln Center, where I met up with entrepreneur Imani Garner of Ethos Sync. Witnessing the salsa jazz performance there was a wonderful experience. Later, my uncle, cousins and I caught a limited-edition Mary J. Blige concert movie at the Magic Johnson AMC Theaters in Harlem. She made a surprise appearance! Afterward, we celebrated with delicious burgers at Harlem Shake.

A woman in a green velvet top and black headwrap reads a paper in a dimly lit room with other people seated around her, some holding drinks, and city lights visible through large windows in the background.

Dizzy's Club. Photo: Zaakirah Muhammad

A jazz band performs on stage in a dimly lit club. Musicians play piano, saxophones, trumpet, and percussion, while audience members sit at tables, watching and listening. Blue stage lights illuminate the scene.

Dizzy's Club. Photo: Zaakirah Muhammad

Day 3

On my final day, I stayed in Brooklyn to explore another borough. My mom’s high school friend graciously picked me up, giving me a personal tour of the streets of the three apartments she once called home in Flatbush, Fort Greene and Bed-Stuy. We then drove across the iconic Brooklyn Bridge to the apartment complex where my mom and her siblings grew up in Midtown, and where my grandfather had once managed the building at the intersection of Spring Street and Thompson Street down in Soho.

Side-by-side photos of tree-lined city streets featuring rows of red brick apartment buildings with stoops and iron railings, taken on a sunny day.

Brooklyn streetscapes. Photos: Zaakirah Muhammad

For lunch, we ate at Famous Ben’s Pizza. I had a delicious, generous slice of Margherita pizza. The chalkboard menu was large and clear, making it easy to read. I noticed that the restrooms were not accessible. I observed another diner in a wheelchair whose family member had to manually open a separate door from the top lock to provide access.

Street view of Ben’s Pizza of SoHo, a corner pizzeria with a red awning and neon signs, located in a brick building with fire escapes and a parked gray car in front.

Famous Ben's Pizza. Photo: Zaakirah Muhammad

That evening, I got the opportunity to have a delicious dinner at The Green Room, a Black-owned restaurant and lounge in Brooklyn. I had a nonalcoholic drink called the Amalfi Lavender Spritz, truffle fries with a lime aioli dip to start and pan-seared salmon as the main dish, with arugula salad on the side. The customer service was impeccable.

A woman stands outside The Green Room restaurant at night; on the right, a table inside shows cocktails, a glass of water, dipping sauce, and a metal container of thick-cut fries.

The Green Room. Photos: Zaakirah Muhammad

When I travel, I see the continued need for establishments to prioritize universal design and create an environment where every patron is accommodated. This solo trip to NYC was an affirmative journey of reconnecting with my family’s past and charting my own path with the City’s ever-evolving accessibility.

A person stands at a crosswalk, waiting to press a pedestrian crossing button. Cars are driving on the street in the background, with trees lining the sidewalk on a sunny day.

Photo: Gabby Jones


Find more stories and resources in our
Accessible NYC guide.

Zaakirah Nayyar Muhammad is a storyteller, healer and advocate who helps Black, Muslim and disabled creatives build brands rooted in authenticity. She founded See Life Different—a multimedia podcast and platform dedicated to helping underrepresented voices reclaim their stories—and is based in Nairobi, Kenya, and Atlanta, Georgia.

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